Jupiter Again

Last night I tried to take pictures of Jupiter through my spotting scope again.  A few days ago, I had pretty good luck getting the moons around Jupiter, but I wanted to try and get the cloud bands on the planet itself.  I didn't have the best of luck.  I was out at Mr. Neil's with Lorraine, Non Birding Bill stayed home.  I spent the night because I needed to grab some beehive frames and take them to a Twin Cities nature center today so they can be used for programs.  The center does a honey extraction program this time of year and they didn't have enough frames for demonstration, so I was glad we could loan a few to help them out.  Not only are we helping a friend, but someone else will extract our honey for us--that's a win-win if you ask me.

So, I set up my scope on Jupiter and enjoyed the fall night--the heavy smell of pine, the quiet peeps of small birds migrating in the night...and the few random wood frogs giving it one last go before the cold forces them underground.  The above photo made the planet look more like cell division rather than Jupiter.  That was from hand holding the camera, so I tried using the timer on the camera while it was attached to the scope to reduce shake.

Hm...that setting didn't work.  You can make out Jupiter and it's moons...but it looks rather...phallic.

Oh my...the moons took on a rather different shape...uh...wow...

Well, wow.  That just...all I can say is that clearly, my mind was not on astronomy...and possibly that I was missing NBB.

I did get one very grainy photo of jupiter and you can kind of make out the cloud bands.  I think I'll stick to digiscoping birds.

Digiscoping Jupiter

If you follow astronomy, Jupiter is very bright in the evening sky.  I thought I would see what I could do with my Swarovski spotting scope.  I aimed it and at 20 power magnification, I could easily make out the planet Jupiter and four of its moons.  I was even able to digiscope it with my Nikon D40:

I managed to capture it--a bit shaky but still, you can make out the large planet and two moons on either side.  My eyepiece zooms up to 60 power and when I did that, you could actually make out the cloud rings on Jupiter.  Alas, I was not able to digiscope that but it's cool to know that the spotting can be used for more than just birds.

Digiscoping Skydivers

Last week, my neighbor Zoe mentioned she was going to go skydiving with some friends.  We've known  a few people who have done it and they always seem to end up with a cool video marred by cheesy music like Kenny Loggins waxing musical about the "Danger Zone."  Zoe mentioned that she probably would not buy the video and I offered to come along an try to digiscope her with my Swarovski spotting scope and Nikon D40.

I arrived early to Skydive Twin Cities (which oddly enough actually jumps in Baldwin, WI) and watched some of the other skydivers and practiced on them.  The only thing that was a bummer was the overcast sky.  Had it been a sunny day, these shots would have been killer.  With my scope, many assumed I was the staff photographer and asked for requests (even though I was dress rather unprofessionally in my MN Roller Girls hoodie).

I thought it would be harder to find the jumpers with my scope, but the colorful chutes were large enough and circled in a fairly predictable pattern that I was able to get the shots I wanted for the most part.

Here's another practice shot.  As jumpers were coming down, I realized that they were going up in groups of 6 - 8 and that it would help a great deal if I knew the color of chute to concentrate on my friends as they came down.  We did talk to the instructors who would come down with and my friends and they told us the colors and I noted that jumpsuits--my friends had on lighter colored suits so I would be able to find them easier with that too.  I did find it amusing that all of the instructors smoked like chimneys between jumps.  I  supposed if you jump out of a plane 8 times a day, lung cancer doesn't seem that threatening.

It finally came time for my friends to jump and I followed their plane with my scope.  Having watched it a few times, I knew the general route the plane would take.

And I was able to digiscope the plane!  It was a bit easier to get a plane in flight than a bird--not as likely to get distracted by prey below it like a goshawk would.  So I kept my scope on it and my camera at the ready.  For the most part, people had left me alone when I was practicing getting shots on the other jumps.  This time, when I really needed to concentrate, people started asking me questions or even asking for photo requests of friends.  I was probably a little terse in my answers and finally said something to the effect of, "I've been paid privately by other jumpers to focus on them and no one else."

I almost lost the plane a few times as it was right overhead and disappeared in the cloud cover, but I managed to get the last two people jumping from the plane.  Turns out the last two to leave the plane were my neighbor and my friend Ben.  Above is Zoe free falling and Ben is about to leave the plane--you can see his limbs hanging out the side.

And here goes my friend Ben.  Both of these photos were digiscoped from the ground while the plane was at 13,000 feet!  Pretty darned cool!  Again, I'm bummed with the cloudy and dark conditions but at least these are souveneir photos for my friends.

Here are a couple of other free fallers.  These ended up being the camera guys who film you during the jump.

Here are my friends coming down.  That's Ben in front and Zoe in back.  Incidentally, that Ben is Ben San Del a local stand up comedian--he's very funny, I loved his show this summer A Nice Guy's Guide to Awkward Sex.  Non Birding Bill and I are going to watch him open for Emo Phillips in November.  Perhaps he will work in some skydiving humor? The instructor told me the wrong color for Ben's chute but thanks to my scope's clarity, I was able to pick out in his chute early on.

This has opened up a new world of digiscoping to me.  I hope to go back on a sunny day--sounds like Ben and Zoe are game to do it again.  Apparently, when it comes to skydiving, no one does it twice.  You either do it once and never again or you do it for the first time and come completely addicted.

What other non birding things can I digiscope?

The Birds That Got Away

One of the things I was counting on to give me an edge over Clay in our Digiscoping Duel was this mountain ash tree (or rowan as Mr. Neil calls it).  It's ripe and the berries time perfectly with fall migration.

This tree can be loaded with all sorts of birds like the above female rose-breasted grosbeak and I did get shots of cedar waxwings right away, but as soon as the contest was over, all sorts of species flew in for a feast.  The light hit the tree perfectly, so I stuck around after the contest was finished to get some shots.

Of course there were more waxwings.  My first photo wasn't bad but they practically seemed to be posing now that the contest was over.  Above is an adult cedar waxwing.

The younger waxwings that were hatched this summer will be stripey.  If you have waxwings in your neighborhood, take a moment to watch them in your fruit trees--they attack the fruits and berries with such verve.  They don't come to bird feeders--they don't seem to have any interest in sunflowers and millet.  They will come in to birdbaths and you generally don't get one at a time, you get thirty (at least).

I love watching them gulp berries.  These small, slender birds are easy to miss in tree branches.  Even their calls blend in well if you are tuned into them.  Here's a link to waxwing calls so you can know what they sound like.

Among the waxwings was this Tennessee warbler (dude, where were you during the digiscoping challenge--arg).  Especially after the dreadfully blurry and ghostly image of that black and white.  Ah well, win some, lose some.

Too small to grab a whole ash berry and gulp it, this bird used its dainty bill to pierce the skins to get at the juice on the inside.

The next bird that popped up was a male scarlet tanager already in his winter plumage--really, tanager, you're killing me here.  I will say this, even though I tried to use a fence and bush to break up my silhouette from the sun behind me, it felt very cagey with my scope aimed on it.  It ate three berries and flew off.

Even though I already had a photo of an eastern bluebird, I was sorry I couldn't use this shot of a juvenile molting into its adult plumage.

Here was another heart-breaking shot--far better than the image I got during the actual contest of a red-eyed vireo.  Alas.  I still had a tough time getting a shot of this bird.  Vireos are known for their ability to flit about the top of a tree canopy and sing nonstop.  The bird kept moving around so much in the tree that it had trouble stopping long enough to eat some berry.  I always thought accipiters like Cooper's hawks and goshawks were ADD birds, but I suspect the vireo is even worst.  Constant movement is a good strategy--good way to sneak up on insects and confust potential predators.  Just makes going for stationary berries a challenge.

This tree is a good example of providing food for birds and other wildlife in your yard besides just bird feeders and water sources and it's part of what makes Mr. Neil's yard so fun for me to watch birds in and take their pictures.

To see more photos of the Digiscoping Duel, check the Flickr Album.

Random Monday Sparrow

white-throated-sparrow

I have to say that I'm having a heck of a time here in Oklahoma.  Yesterday, at least three vehicles got stuck in muddy roads during field trips (no worries, vehicles were saved and participants still got to see some great birds).  But you know it's a great adventerous festival with gorgeous wild places with a tag line like that.

Besides the prairie chickens, we're gettins some great sparrows, like this white-crowned sparrow above.  I'll have more photos to post, but I've got one more field trip to do.